1. Introduction
Urbanization is a global process that has been occurring for centuries. In recent decades, it has accelerated to concerning levels. According to the United Nations, the world’s urban population is expected to reach 68% by 2050 [
1], and processes like industrialization, globalization, and rural-to-urban migration intensified this movement. Urbanization has also driven economic growth, as cities are centers of innovation, productivity, and entrepreneurship. Urban areas account for more than 80% of global GDP [
2] and are the locus of a significant portion of the world’s wealth generation. Urban concentration has also led to better access to healthcare, education, and sanitation services. In cities, people have better access to medical facilities, schools, and clean water, improving health outcomes and life expectancy. Additionally, urbanization has led to the development of roads, bridges, and public transportation systems, facilitating the movement of goods and people and contributing to economic growth.
However, it has also led to numerous challenges related to environmental degradation, social inequality, and inadequate infrastructure that have become normal in any urban society. Rapid urbanization has increased greenhouse gas emissions, air pollution, and waste production, negatively impacting the environment and public health. It has been a driving force behind environmental degradation, as cities are centers of pollution, waste production, and deforestation. They account for more than 70% of global greenhouse gas emissions and generate a significant portion of the world’s waste [
3].
Among these challenges, mobility and environmental degradation are essential in urban society. In the modern world, mobility can assume many different shapes and expressions. It has firmly established itself as a form of entertainment and one of the primary engines of capital reproduction for service-based economies. Tourism, which involves people traveling to locations other than their usual place of residence, typically for leisure, is an example of how large flows of people could manifest themselves in contemporary society. Another aspect is freight transport, which has grown exponentially and plays an essential role in the urban economy, especially in urban centers, where there is a high intensity of the movement of goods.
In the effort to deliver an adequate quality level of mobility and attend to market demands, people and goods must transit through congested transportation networks. In this direction, the new paradigm of capitalism that arose after the 1970s is today most exemplified by the cyclical movements of trade and services, which also serve as the significant expression of flows and networks in the movement of modern cities. Around
$16.7 trillion worth of financial transactions were placed globally in 2020, an increase of more than 300% since 1996. Currently, China (
$2.65 T) is the world’s top exporter, while the United States (
$2.24 T) is the top importer [
4].
However, the current state of urban mobility has many negative impacts on the cities. As cities grow, the number of vehicles on the road increases, leading to traffic congestion, a severe problem in many cities worldwide. It has serious negative impacts on the environment, public health, air pollution, noise pollution, and more. The effects of these acts have led to environmental deterioration and a decline in living standards in surrounding cities and towns. Planners, legislators, and other stakeholders have realized that reducing automotive traffic is vital to preserving the environment and quality of life. Today, it is possible to observe an increasing effort to implement sustainable mobility and transport strategies in some way to solve these problems, which may include green infrastructure building, renewable energy use, and, finally, actions to promote non-motorized mobility, such as parking restrictions, car use fees, and car-free zones in central areas.
In this direction, this article analyzes the challenges for sustainable mobility in the Latin American context through a systematic literature review process. However, it is important to highlight that this paper focuses on the challenges related to the mobility of people instead of freight. On a global scale, it is possible to evidence the concerns about the impact of mobility on the sustainability of nations through the existence, for example, of the Sustainable Development Goals of the United Nations. The United Nations has recognized, even if in a modest grade, the importance of sustainable urban mobility and has included it as a target in some of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), including SDG 11, which aims to make cities and human settlements more inclusive, safe, resilient, and sustainable, and SDG 3, which recognizes its importance for public health while ensuring healthy lives and well-being for people of all ages.
This study aims to identify similarities and differences in terms of the development of sustainable mobility and transport studies between a global context and a Latin American context. This analysis is expected to offer insights into how Latin American studies have evolved and what paths could be explored to advance toward more sustainable mobility. As a practical implication, this article delivers a review of what has been done and new paths that could be taken in future studies regarding the Latin American context, emphasizing the methodological and case study approaches.
According to Moscoso et al. [
5], within the Latin American context, the emerging issues related to sustainable mobility and transport are equity, climate change, and health concerns. Moreover, the authors highlight that beyond the high levels of urbanization, it is the most unequal region in the world, from a social and transport infrastructure perspective, leading to significant levels of motorized mobility with a critical impact on congestion and air pollution, within a context in which the vulnerable population is socially and economically conditioned to public and active mobility.
Sustainable mobility has become a concept that addresses all of these issues by promoting environmentally friendly, socially equitable, and economically viable transportation. It involves a shift towards more sustainable modes of transportation, such as innovative public transit systems, electric vehicles, cycling, and walking, and the development of infrastructure supporting them. According to Banister [
6], sustainable mobility relates to the effort to strengthen the link between land use and transport, aiming to reduce average trip distances adequate to walking and cycling and prioritizing the promotion of public transport to minimize the use of private vehicles (such as cars or motorcycles). In addition, the author points out that sustainable mobility is achieved through strategies that give people the choice between non-motorized mobility and public transport, without prohibitive policies related to car use and without decreasing the quality of the mobility experience.
Policies and practices that promote sustainable mobility are priorities for the future transformation of urban areas. The relationship between sustainable mobility and inhabitants’ quality of life in large cities and urban agglomerations has been a leading research subject. It is about reducing the negative impacts of transportation, improving accessibility, and providing high-quality transportation through and within urban areas. However, to achieve it, one must consider the needs of all members of society, mainly those whose transportation systems have traditionally underserved their citizens. For this reason, it is essential to evaluate the research advancements within the Latin American context, composed of countries still struggling to implement mobility policies aligned with the SDGs.
Besides
Section 1, this article is divided into five sections:
Section 2 is dedicated to presenting previous reviews on the topic of sustainable mobility/transport and argues the importance of this article by differentiating this article from other reviews;
Section 3 focuses on describing methods and materials used to perform the systematic literature review proposed;
Section 4 develops the proposed methods with its respective analysis;
Section 5 discusses the challenges for sustainable mobility in the Latin American context; and the last section is the presentation of conclusions and final considerations.
2. Previous Focus of Reviews on Sustainable Mobility
Before getting into the specifics of this paper, it is relevant to identify and understand previous review papers surrounding the topic of sustainable mobility and transport, with special attention to methodological aspects, in order to justify the methodological and conceptual frameworks of this study. This understanding sets this paper apart from others in terms of methodological approach and general results/conclusions. Using the following search criteria in the Web of Science database (search date: 4 July 2021), 31 review papers were found: title: (“sustainable mobility”) or title: (“sustainable transport”); languages: (English); document types: (review); timespan: all years; and indexes: SCI-EXPANDED, SSCI, A&HCI, ESCI. However, of these 31, 5 are closely related to a general view of sustainable mobility or transport [
7,
8,
9,
10,
11].
Cohen et al. [
7] point out reasons for the lack of action regarding sustainable mobility, although there is existing evidence that tourism transport has a growing environmental impact. The key topics discussed in this paper are based on several findings presented at the Freiburg 2014 workshop: socio-technical factors; technology myths; and transport taboos. These topics are deepened by Cohen et al. [
7], without a specific procedure for selecting references.
Dehghanmongabadi & Hoşkara [
8] aims to point out critical determinative variables to promote active transportation modes and consequently contribute to sustainable mobility in communities. Using as key search terms “sustainable transportation”, “sustainable mobility”, and “active transportation”, this review searched journal articles (SCI and SSCI), books, published conference papers, reports, and published research works. Based on the focus of the found material, the authors selected 40 papers to review, resulting in the recommendation of key variables to promote active mobility.
Holden et al. [
9] develop a conceptual review of sustainable mobility through an extensive literature review. This review does not establish explicit criteria for selecting literature. However, it is guided by three key elements: strategies, responsible agents, and how sustainable mobility can be achieved. It is relevant to point out that the crossing of these elements in this study aims to identify contemporary interest regarding sustainable mobility. For example, Holden et al. [
9], within the identified strategies, present the reduction strategies from the expert approach, which refers to the planning of compact cities with short distances of trips, under the perspective of developing a high-density built environment and mixed land use, with a focus on promoting higher use of public transport and active mobility.
Lanzini & Stocchetti [
10] focus on identifying the principles’ evolution for sustainable urban mobility between 1996 and 2018, with particular attention to planning and management. For this review, the authors considered journal articles and proceedings in the Web of Science and Scopus databases from 1996 to 2018. The searched terms by Lanzini & Stocchetti [
10] were “urban mobility” and “urban transport”. Additionally, this review focused on articles within the socio-economic areas, defined by the database of Web of Science and Scopus, such as management, business, economics, urban studies, public administration, and related disciplines. In other words, articles outside socio-economic areas were excluded. Furthermore, the authors focused on universally applicable articles that, according to the authors, refer to empirical studies with broadly applicable results and methods, which led to a manual process of excluding articles through the reading of the titles and abstracts, which brought the number of findings from 2691 to 237 articles, which were actually reviewed for the proposed purpose.
Zhao et al. [
11] apply science mapping, with the support of CiteSpace software (version 6), to identify the research trends of sustainable transport studies between 2000 and 2019. This review gathered the documents to be analyzed from the Web of Science core collection database, using the following search terms in the title of the papers: “sustainable transport”; “sustainable transportation”; “green transport”; and “green transportation”. It is relevant to highlight that Zhao et al. [
11] excluded from the analysis all research that did not fall into the following research areas: engineering; building and construction; architecture; and sustainability. This study focused on statistical and graphical analysis of keyword co-occurrence analysis and document co-citation analysis without an in-depth analysis of the content of the papers because the authors analyzed the following information: authors, affiliations, and country/region; title; abstract; keywords; year of publication; source journal, and references.
To conclude, it is possible to observe that this present article seeks to fill a gap related to mapping and understanding the development of case studies within the Latin American context regarding sustainable mobility and transport and the differences in comparison to the global context on the topic. Moreover, focusing on the application of these perspectives on countries in these regions and seeking to identify the focus of studies in terms of their methodologies and general conclusions, which yet have not been explored from the proposed approach, is explained in detail in the following section.
5. Comparison and Discussion: Sustainable Mobility Challenges in the Latin American Context
It is always a huge challenge to compare Latin America with the rest of the world in all aspects. The geohistorical differences that led to their differential development, their colonized past, the culture of its people, and their relative position among the hegemonized world in the actual framework of global financial capitalism are specific processes that cause not only inequality but also led to different challenges in sustainable transport and mobility. Notwithstanding, all these differences are reflected in the interests and focuses of the articles brought to analysis.
Within the Latin American context, one focus has been sustainable mobility indexes, modeling, and spatial indicators. In this direction, there are some similarities among the approaches of Campos et al. [
42], Alba-Martínez et al. [
55], Meira et al. [
56], Oviedo and Guzmán [
58] and Valenzuela-Levi et al. [
60]. They ground their research on quantitative methods such as multicriterial analysis, transport costs, and constraints analysis, or housing location analysis based on mobility indicators. This approach has the advantage of putting the evidence on objective grounds with rigorous quantitative methods. However, it has drawbacks, such as the difference in methodology and final results and the difficult comparability of data from the same period and scale.
Another interesting approach relates to participatory planning processes to promote sustainable mobility, which is aligned with the studies of Lake Sagaris [
43,
44,
52], Sagaris et al. [
59], and Sosa-López and Monteiro [
51]. It is relevant to highlight that, within the Chilean context, Sagaris plays a major role in the political emancipation of Chilean communities in terms of achieving a more sustainable transport landscape, mainly through active modes of mobility, such as cycling. These papers focus on the experiences that Sagaris had while conducting participatory activities. The Chilean socioeconomic landscape may be similar to other LA countries such as Brazil, Mexico, and Bolivia, which makes it important to learn and seek to replicate these studies in other neighboring countries. With the same approach, Sosa-López and Monteiro [
51] analyze the role of the “expert citizens” in Mexico, which also relies on understanding stakeholders/political agents’ interests and searching for consensus. This approach is rich in terms of describing the crude and naked reality of Latin American countries’ political bureaucracy, which lies in a complex political background of fragile post-dictatorial democracies. Thus, this is often the major challenge in public policy implementation. The efforts of the researchers in organizing and promoting participatory planning environments are remarkable and should inspire other similar initiatives. As possible drawbacks, we can cite the high subjectivity of the participative methods, which cannot be made into a general rule (and it doesn’t even intend to) and hardly the results can be applied in different places and cases.
Furthermore, there are studies that undertake mobility survey and their analysis., such as Stein and Silva [
50], Scheffer et al. [
54], and Guzman et al. [
57]. The two first mentioned conducted their study in Universities, through the application of questionnaires, and they sought to understand the high preference of users for the car when commuting to study. The latter uses a rigorous methodology to choose the companies with chosen survey participants and apply a state preference choice analysis to understand the willingness to change from passive to active modes of travel. This type of article has a major strength going into the roots of the problem when better understanding the population’s preference for the use of cars in many situations (work and study) and what could be done to promote active modes of travel more effectively. Additionally, the University campuses act as a small laboratory for a city, since it is a more controlled urban environment but still carries major urban process vectors.
Different from other studies, within the Latin American context, some focus on collecting information through interviews [
45], semi-structured interviews [
48], workshops to generate a SWOT matrix [
46], and documental analysis [
47,
53]. Interestingly, they focus on collecting lessons based on the policy approach and governance situations applied to different cities in Latin America. It is possible to observe that there is a constant effort to understand how the stakeholders’ relationship affects the mobility of citizens. The methods used in these studies are focused on collecting local particularities concerning the referred topic and offers interesting methodological approaches related to focus group, workshops, and documentation analysis to advance toward a better comprehension of the governance surrounding the mobility policy.
When comparing the main issues emerging from the GC articles with the LA ones, we can observe a greater concern with climate change issues and the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions, mainly carbon. Thereby also concerns the increasing share of motorized travel modes, such as private vehicles. Moreover, more attention is given in GC to the goals of international treaties such as the Kyoto Protocol and the 2030 UN Agenda. The LA papers show a slight prevalence of transport issues related to urban inequalities, social movements, and governance.
Among the methods, both groups utilize more qualitative approaches to historical policy analysis and quantitative analysis based on indexes, especially multivariate analysis and building future scenarios. However, in LA we can notice a higher application of qualitative approaches directed to understanding mobility conditions and identifying barriers to moving toward sustainable mobility, in terms of social inequality, policy, and governance aspects. Possibly, this can be related to a lack of information to generate and outdated data in several cities of the region, which difficult the implementation of quantitative approaches, related to indicators and spatial analysis of mobility. On the other hand, in GC there is more discussion on the principles and relevant elements that represent sustainable mobility and transport towards questioning the coherence of policy, guidelines, and strategies related to promoting sustainable cities and mobility patterns.
In general, one can say that LA articles have a focus on urban/regional scale transport-related issues, often raising questions over the social dimension of sustainability, governance policy tools, and citizen democratic participation in the Global South, just barely questioning the roots of the environmental dimension of sustainability debate, while the GC ones are always facing this issue as its main problem to solve, recognized by the United Nations.
Comparing the themes approached, in GC we have a broader sort that includes urban space allocation with remote-sensing measurement method [
29], TOD neighborhoods typologies definition [
30], issues of rural tourism [
35] and role-model advocacy to promote sustainable mobility [
33]. Thus, the general context presents evident concerns with reducing carbon emissions by the transport sector. On the other hand, in LA, which has higher social concerns, there is an evident focus on public policy building and evaluation that includes citizen participation, the realization of workshops, and analysis of their outcomes (Warren et al., Sagaris [
44,
46]), identification of driving forces and stakeholders [
48] and two policy tools classification schemes presented by Mercier, et al. [
45,
47]. Finally, in LA, it is observed concerns with sustainable mobility in university campuses, taken both as mini-city labs and trip generator places (Stein & Silva; Scheffer, et al.; Alba-Martínez, et al. [
50,
54,
55]).
Both article categories give huge conceptual importance to behavioral and psychological theories. They focus on qualitative and quantitative analysis, from the oldest article observed by Steg and Tertoolen [
18] to the latest, from Smith, et al. [
35]. These analyses remain mainly on identifying behavioral travel trends that lead to car dependency and barriers for people to change to more active travel modes, such as cycling and walking. In this way, it is representative of the article from Guzman, et al. [
57] that undertakes a state-preference survey to understand this behavior better.
In the practical arena, Sagaris plays a leading role among LA papers being the main representant of participative methods research-based conjugated with political, practical, and transformative action (Sagaris [
43,
44,
52]; Sagaris & Arora [
49]; Sagaris, et al. [
59]). Meanwhile, in GC a leading role is played by Banister, who conceptualizes and reviews sustainable mobility/transport terms and sets research guidelines and political goals, from his 2008 paper—the most cited article among the selection—to the most recent in 2019, that undertakes a broad historical analysis from the research field (Banister [
6,
20,
32]; Hickman, et al. [
25]; Holden, et al. [
36]). In this sense, the paper from Gössling & Cohen [
28] addresses the role of “taboos” that undergoes the background of all the political debate.
Last but not least, there is an overall consensus on the potential role of urban planning, land-use definition, and car-use restriction policies to promote sustainable mobility, which is commonly referred among the TOD principles (Loo & du Verle [
30]; Loo & Tsoi [
34]), such as the applied in Curitiba, Montreal, Portland (Mercier, et al. [
45,
47]) and Washington and Stuttgart (Buehler [
21]; Buehler et al. [
27]), and with the policy-mix of push and pull measures adopted in Freiburg, Vienna and other European cities (Buehler & Pucher [
22]; Buehler et al. [
31]). However, it is also consensus that car-use restriction measures must be accompanied by good public transport services, an issue already surpassed in TOD neighborhoods.
In conclusion, it is possible to observe that within the Latin American context, there is a valuable development of studies related to sustainable mobility and transport, however, there are some gaps that could be explored in order to support the development of policies at a more local scale towards more sustainable mobilities. Moreover, relating to Banister’s [
6] comprehension of sustainable mobility, it seems that there are opportunities to explore mobility patterns with a closer relationship to the built environment and infrastructure at smaller scales and also in different contexts, such as small and medium-sized cities and rural areas. LA research seems to focus strongly on behavior, mobility patterns, and purpose of trips, leaving aside how the surrounding and built environment may influence at a local scale the mobility experience, aiming to add value to the act of moving, instead of the destination activity, and being in touch with the landscapes, architecture, art, pollution, sounds, health, etc.
In the face of unequal urban environments, where vulnerable populations are not given the choice to use less contaminating modes of transport, but are conditioned to them for economic reasons, another area to develop research is how to add value and improve the mobility experience by understanding the impact of the built environment and land use distribution in Latin American cities in order to promote strategies and action plans that align with local context and needs. In this direction, one could recognize that social inequality is a chronic and complex issue in Latin American countries, which is related to multiple causes and requires long-term planning strategies. However in the short- and medium-term perspective the lack of “down to earth” prioritization of investments and policies´ development towards improving mobility conditions seems to relate to the scarcity of studies that explore more local cases, with emphasis on the impact of the quality of the paths/routes/built environment and places, that socially and physically vulnerable populations frequently take or are exposed to, on the mobility experience. Thus, this direction could shed some light on the reality of this region (and its cities) and not the sustainable mobility utopia, in which for everyone sustainable actions are a choice and not a conditioning context for the poor.
6. Conclusions and Final Considerations
In this bibliographical review article, we have analyzed, compared, and discussed 40 articles from the WoSCC that rely on the concept of “sustainable mobility” or “sustainable transport”. Of these, 19 were based on LA themes or authors, and 21 were from what we called “General Literature”. The papers were selected based on a consistent methodology, including a personalized search in the WoSCC, looking for papers that strictly had those terms/concepts in their titles.
The sustainable mobility/transport applications were discussed through the literature review. A periodization was undertaken based on key political and social events in the past decades about the theme. A quantitative analysis was performed, observing the metrics of the articles about their year of publication, scientific areas, and peer-reviewed journal of publication. Next, a co-occurrence analysis of the keywords was made, with the support of the VOSviewer software, for each determined period. The results were discussed, looking for differences in the evolution of the scientific debate. Meanwhile, among the LA papers, we run the co-occurrence analysis for all time, without periodization, due to the smaller number of articles.
After that, a co-citation and cluster analysis was performed with the GC articles and the VOSviewer’s support to identify the most cited authors in each cluster without distinction between main authors and co-authors. Thereby, the top two authors of each cluster had their articles selected for the in-depth analysis. The LA-based papers were all selected for the in-depth review, except those with no case study applied to the Latin American context.
Towards the in-depth review, the articles had their main issues, themes, motivations, methodology, and outcomes systematized in tables and thus classified, supporting a deep comparison and discussion between the scientific debate on sustainable mobility/transport going on LA and outwards. It is interesting to point out, within the LA context, the need to advance towards studies on sustainable mobility and transport applied to rural areas and small- and medium-sized cities, which receive low attention in Latin American countries and are even, in some cases, being depopulated for reasons related to quality of life and opportunities.
As a result, we conclude that GC has a major concern with climate change issues and decarbonization goals, while LA relies most on the social dimension of sustainability, injustice, inequalities, and the effort for change in the political arena within the urban scale. This could be explained in part because of the Western countries’ relative political stability that comes from the postwar period, while LA countries have been dealing with much more challenging and complex political scenarios derived from fragile democracies with much less time for stabilization. This could be also endorsed by the cluster analysis in
Section 4.2, wherein the words ‘social exclusion’, ‘intervention’, ‘participation’, and ‘politics’—instead of ‘policy’—appear.
Latin American research demonstrates that there are still areas of study to be explored that relate more to what Banister [
6] defines as a sustainable mobility perspective, such as evaluating mobility at a more local scale, understanding the relationship of land use/built environment and mobility and evaluating travel as valued activity (not only as a derived demand). In this direction, most studies seem to focus on the destination of trips and how people get to them, while there is the need to explore through alternative methodologies, such as experimental and in-situ evaluations, the paths/routes of trips, within the Latin American context at different scales to promote a better understanding and strategies to advance towards more sustainable cities and mobilities.
The similarities remain in adopting push and pull measures to promote sustainable transport and reduce motorized private vehicle use in the present built environment while adopting TOD principles in developing new neighborhoods and future cities. Here we should notice that Western countries have much bigger shares of private car use and cars per habitant indicator than the LA ones, which have more concerns about the land-use pattern and distribution of trip generators activities/places and housing location. In this way, it is important to highlight that the spread of automobiles in LA countries—and thereby the car-oriented development paradigm—was promoted by those Western countries and their automotive industries since the sixties, when the productive restructuring arose and many fabrics were moved to LA countries. Regarding the methods utilized, we can conclude that there is some difference between GC and LA articles, mainly for the participative methods utilized in LA and the urban transport land-use measurement by remote sensing conducted only in GC.
Interesting approaches that could be conducted in LA in the future include the TOD-neighborhood classification [
30], the carbon emission top-down and bottom-use measurement methods [
24], the urban space allocation measurement [
29], the policy tools undertook in Freiburg and Vienna (Buehler & Pucher [
22]; Buehler, et al. [
31]), the strategies for achieving sustainable mobility (Banister [
6,
20]; Hickman, et al. [
25]), a better understand from the transport taboos in LA [
29], to promote the role-model/celebrity activism [
33], to understand the psychological behavior of car users and put up pull measures upon it [
18].
While dealing with quantitative analysis, one can conclude that it should be kept as simple and smooth as possible because many variables and complex scenario building based on many estimated indexes and suppositions can obscure more than clarify the path. This is a problem due mainly to the lack of data on a detailed scale and methodological compatibility between the travel surveys that various countries have conducted. Indeed, a virtuous path is to make them comparable through international cooperation among their respective entities responsible for the survey conduction. Here, the appointments of Litman [
19] on rigorously index selection procedure may be of high value.
Finally, sustainable transport should be seen in its totality, given that many measures that may reduce carbon emission in commuting travel can have side effects on the leisure/non-commuting travel patterns, even improving its volume and carbon emission.
As this article had a time reference deadline of 4 July 2021, we decided to conclude it with a brief perspective of what has been produced in the field in LA since it. Considering that, we repeated the search at WoSCC with the same criteria for the period from 4 July 2021 to 18 July 2023 (
Figure 10). The search returned 12 articles from Brazil, Chile, Colombia, and Mexico, but one was discarded due to not being a study about LA. Next, we analyzed their keywords co-occurrence with the VOSviewer, which gave us the frame of the discussed topic in this period.
Through so, we can assume that sustainable mobility in LA has gone deeper into new equity questions, such as gender inequality and transport safety. Additionally, emphasis has been given to active modes of travel and physical activity, which are highly connected with a more significant concern over public health equity and the city paradigm change brought about by the COVID-19 pandemic. In terms of study locations, Chile and Mexico sought to be the leading places of sustainable mobility research in LA for this period.
To finally conclude this paper, we point out from the volume of publications (
Figure 3) that sustainable mobility and transport research in LA has a large gap to fill when compared to Global North countries. This seems to be particularly relevant when we notice, in
Section 4.2, that all the countries from Latin America together have published less than much smaller Global North countries, such as Spain, Italy, and Denmark.